IDs to Include Data Chips

A North Korean border guard checks the documents of boat passengers in Sinuiju, Oct. 25, 2006.

AFP

Authorities in repressive North Korea are planning to exert even stricter controls on citizens by issuing electronic identification cards containing personal information, according to sources inside the country.

According to one source, who spoke to RFA on condition of anonymity, the current plastic IDs will be replaced with cards containing circuit chips which store data about the cardholder, including address, family background, and record of travel.

“North Korean people will be made to bring the new ID cards when they travel so security officers can know everything about their trip, such as the person’s destination, when he or she has traveled, and how many times they have traveled,” the source said.

The new focus on ID cards shows that the North Korean regime is devoting resources to strengthening its control over the people through improving its policing network, despite worsening economic conditions and ongoing food security concerns.

The North Korean source said that this will be the fifth time that North Korea is changing the ID cards of its citizens. The current plastic card has been in use since 2001 and had replaced a booklet-style form of identification.

The source said that the new cards are the same as those that will be used to upgrade identification cards in China beginning next year and that Beijing has strongly supported Pyongyang’s adoption of the new technology, which would help control movement across their shared border.

Experts have suggested that North Korean Chief of National Police Lee Myeong Su recently visited China on a fact-finding mission concerning new technologies that could help the state monitor its population.

A source from China, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said authorities have recently stepped up checks on North Koreans traveling into the country.

“Police officers get on trains which come in across the border carrying metal detectors and searching every single passenger car,” the source said.

“Also, police officers at the turnstiles frisk people with metal detectors.”

Another source from North Korea near the Chinese border also reported increased checks on North Koreans.

“North Korean people should be able to move freely and make money from trade, but now it’s much harder than before because of constant government surveillance,” the source said.

However, the source said, North Korea’s worsening power grid, which has suffered severe shortages, may limit the effectiveness of the new IDs.

Reported by Young Jung for RFA’s Korean service. Translated by Juhyeon Park. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.

Susie

from
Mushroom grove

It is a shame. It's horrible actually. A total infringement on any privacy North Koreans could possibly have. Very disappointing. I have yet to see a government in the world doing rightly by its people.

Sep 20, 2012 11:28 PM

susie q

from
mushroom rollons

This is horrible. Government officials cannot possibly seem to fathom how annoying it will be for citizens. It's another way of showing citizens the government in no way cares about people in its own country. To justify it according to a safety scoop is so lame.

Sep 20, 2012 11:27 PM

MS

It's a shame that people have to live like they do in North Korea. No wonder why they want to leave. There's always a food shortage but the only people that suffer are the citizens. You would think someone that runs the country that young would try an run the country with more of an understanding of how the west runs their country. More food, travel abroad at the same time improving the way people live. Look around at the countries that are free. There living conditions are very good. North Korea is nothing but a big zoo, by keeping their citizens in cages just like a zoo does. Sure his grandfather ran the country, then his dad, and now his son. I'll stop here and just say I feel for the people there and not the government providing that is a government.